Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Justice in Old Pembina

The story I'm about to share has been shared here before.  While the first version was full of character (based on solid research), this one has  more background as well as details regarding the final showdown, written by one of our area's premier local historians...
An outlaw from an infamous gang.  A U.S. Marshall on his trail all the way from Texas.  Their paths meet in Pembina on a cold November day in 1878...

by
James Benjaminson
           
Sam Bass gang - Sam in back, on
left; in front, the Collins bros.
William is on left, Joel on right.
[circa 1877]
In the annals of western outlawry, certain names have been etched into the American psyche – names such as Jesse and Frank James, the Younger Brothers, Billy the Kid, Black Bart and Sam Bass, just to name a few.  For the most part, their villainous exploits took place in parts of the country far remote from rural North Dakota.  The closest any of them got to North Dakota was the James Gangs ill-fated attempt at robbing the bank in Northfield, Minnesota and the Bass gangs robbing of seven stage coaches in the Black Hills of South Dakota.  Still, the effect of one outlaw’s exploits rippled to the tiny town of Pembina, Dakota Territory in 1878.

Sam Bass was a young Texas outlaw who headquartered himself in Denton, Texas.  Teamed up with the outlaw Joel Collins and four others, the Bass gang staged the largest train robbery in U.S. history (at the time) when they held up the Union Pacific railroad at a tiny watering hole called Big Springs, Nebraska on the evening of September 18, 1877.  Although Bass was considered leader of the gang, law enforcement claimed Joel Collins was the brains of the outfit.  The gang rode into the stop over, made hostages of the station master and several others in the vicinity, cut the telegraph lines and waited.  When the train pulled in for water, one gang member swung himself into the cab of the locomotive and took the engineer and fireman hostage while the others headed for the baggage car.

When they rode off into the night, the gang had relieved the railroad of $60,000 in freshly minted 1877 twenty dollar gold pieces.  Dividing up the treasure, each man had 500 gold coins in his possession – about 35 pounds of gold per gang member.  The group split into three groups of two men, each heading in a different direction.   Word spread fast about the robbery and law enforcement swooped in on the area.  One of the gang members disappeared and was never heard of again (many assumed he had gone to Canada).  Joel Collins and his partner didn’t fare as well, being intercepted by a posse within days.  After a brief shoot-out, both outlaws were dead and $20,000 of the gold coins were recovered. 

Bass and his partner figured two lone riders would be suspicious so they acquired a buggy, stashed the coins under the seat and rode blissfully by the bands of law officers they encountered.  Returning to Denton, Bass enjoyed the high life, spending freely and enjoying a local sort of hero worship.  He had plenty of friends to warn him of approaching trouble and knowing the area like the back of his hand, he could easily hide from pursuers.  Living the high life the money soon ran out and Bass returned to his old ways.  Organizing a new gang, he returned to robbing trains.  Only this time he chose to hit the local railroads – his gang robbing four trains in quick succession within a 25 mile radius of his base of operation.  It was at this point the locals turned on him and his gang.  For seven weeks, the gang was pursued by a company of Texas Rangers, U.S. Marshals and local law enforcement, all to no avail (although an accomplice, “Arkansas” Johnson, was killed in a skirmish from which the rest of the gang escaped).

Bass’ downfall came at the hands of a spy that infiltrated the gang – and by gang member Jim Murphy who betrayed him in exchange for having charges dropped against himself and his father.  The fatal day came when the gang rode into Round Rock, Texas intent on robbing the local bank.  Laying in wait were the Texas Rangers and local law enforcement.  In a brief bloody shootout, one deputy sheriff was killed as was one of the outlaws.  Bass himself was wounded but managed to clamber onto to his horse and ride away.  The trailing posse found him the next day, lying under a tree, still alive but mortally wounded.  Death came to Sam Bass July 21, 1878 – it was his 27th birthday.

Of the participants in the April 10th train robbery at Mesquite, Texas, six of the eight robbers had either been killed or were in prison by the time of Bass’ death.  The robbery had netted each of the bandits the paltry sum of $23 each!  One of the gang – William Collins, was arrested days after the robbery and taken to Austin to stand trial.  He was moved to the jail in Dallas in June where a family friend posted a $15,000 bond to secure his appearance in court—a date he did not intend to keep.

A brother to outlaw Joel Collins who had participated in the earlier Big Springs train robbery, William Collins jumped bail and headed north, roaming across several states before eventually ending up in Pembina, Dakota Territory working as a bartender in Jim White’s saloon, a unique watering hole that straddled the border.  A red stripe painted on the floor designated which country a patron was in – the saloon on the U.S. side of the line, with the kitchen and sitting room on the Canadian side.  Known to the locals as William Gale, Collins befriended a local man, Robert Ewing, finally telling Ewing his real name and confiding he had a wife living in Dallas.  Gale/Collins asked Ewing to write her a letter, which apparently Ewing did.  One can only speculate but it is assumed authorities were watching her mail.  It wasn’t long before a deputy U.S. marshal arrived in Pembina looking for Collins.

Appointed as a deputy U.S. marshal in 1872, 38-year old William Anderson was determined to bring Collins in.  Arriving in Pembina, Anderson first sought out local deputy U.S. Marshal Judson LaMoure and Pembina county sheriff Charlie Brown (Brown served from 1876 to 1884), asking their assistance in capturing Bill Collins, a.k.a. William Gale.  It would be easier to make the arrest, Anderson said, if LaMoure and Brown went without him as he was “personally known” by Collins.  With information that Collins was tending bar in White’s Saloon the two lawmen ventured to the boundary to make the collar.  Bellying up to the bar, both men ordered drinks, hoping to catch Collins off guard in order to get the get the drop on him.  It had been noted earlier that Collins had a habit of always taking the “gun fighters seat”, never turning his back to a door or window.  Both LaMoure and Brown tried to get Collins to compromise his position but when their attempts failed, they left without their man.  Collins was apparently aware Anderson was in town and looking for him as he is supposed to have told Sheriff Brown he expected to “have it out” with the Texas lawman.

When Anderson learned his man hadn’t been apprehended he approached postmaster and customs officer Charles Cavileer about using the post office to capture Collins.  Cavileer went along with Anderson’ plan to nab Collins and Anderson took up residence in the building.  It was Friday, November 8, 1878.  From here we pick up the story as it was recalled by James R. Moorhead (son of William H. Moorhead, first sheriff of Pembina County) for Win V. Working of the Grand Forks Herald. 

Moorhead and other young boys were playing near the post office when the final scene was played out.  Moorhead stated “it was growing late in the afternoon although the sun was still warm.  Anderson lay on a bench in the office.  Cavileer was sorting mail.  He looked out the window and saw Collins approaching.  “Here comes your man now” he called to the marshal.  Anderson sprang from the bench, examined his six-shooter and stepping around the counter, took a position a few feet from the door.  When Collins entered, Anderson ordered him softly to throw up his hands.  Collins complied and began to talk.  Collins let his hand drop bit by bit when suddenly his right hand flashed to the inside of his shirt.  Just before his fingers gripped the butt of his six-shooter, which hung in a harness under his left armpit, Anderson fired.  The bullet clipped off most of the end of Collins right thumb up to the first joint and passed through his chest just above the heart. Although mortally wounded, Collins was still able to draw his weapon.  Moorhead continued:  “Collins fired and Anderson ran to the rear of the room and fled through the kitchen door before the wounded Collins could bring his gun up again to fire a second time.  During the shooting the group of young boys which included James Moorhead’s brother, Shep and a boy named Joe Bouvette, were sitting on an “open stairway” with other youths peeking through a rear window of the post office.  Collins first bullet passed within an inch of a lad named Ira Davis, according to Moorhead.  The wounded desperado worked his way past the stove to a point where he had a clear view of the kitchen door.  Anderson returned and peered cautiously through the open door, but he exposed part of his body and Collins shot him through the doorway before the bad man fell to the street.  When the smoke cleared, both men lay dead.

The official marshal service report tells pretty much the same tale, the only exception being that Anderson grabbed Collins left arm and asked another person in the post office to secure Collins right arm, when Collins broke away and drew his weapon.

Telegram notification of
Anderson's death...
In true western fashion, both men “died with their boots on”.  But Anderson died wearing some else….a pair of gold cuff links—gold cuff links given to him on the day of his marriage by his best man – William Collins.  Although William Anderson was several years older, he and William Collins had gone to school together and each had been the best man at the others wedding.  Somewhere along the line they had gone their separate ways – one becoming a lawman, the other an outlaw.  William Anderson left behind a wife and two children; his family received the $10,000 reward offered for the arrest of Collins.  William Anderson’s body was shipped back to Texas where it rests in the Greenwood Cemetery in DallasWilliam Collin’s body was buried in an unmarked grave in Pembina.

The old post office in Pembina stood until May of 1883 when it was demolished.  Built in 1864 it had served as the U.S. Customs house, the first post office and home of Pembina’s first post master, Charles Cavileer.  Upon its demolition, the Pembina paper commented “it has served its day and generation (and) has to submit to the destroyer.  In the old front door is a bullet hole, the relic of a terrible tragedy which occurred some five years ago, when a detective and a desperado exchanged mutually fatal shots, both expiring in a few minutes” --- the bloody legacy of Sam Bass, Texas outlaw.
















Excerpted from Murder and Mayhem in Pembina County
© Jim Benjaminson   

1 comment:

  1. James McClelland11:47 AM

    Fasinating and tragic story. considering the previous relationship between Anderson and Collins ,one has to wonder why it ended so violently. I had never heard about it before. I am sure it would have written up in the Emerson papers, but I must have missed it.
    Jim White's Saloon was probably located in Huron City, right along the border. However by the time the story unfolds the boundary had been surveyed for several years. It is possible that the building wads located a mile south of the border on what once had been accepted as the demarcation between Canada and the USA. At anyrate it was a good story.

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